"Everyone is a genius. But if you judge a fish on its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid" - Albert Einstein
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
Sunday, January 15, 2012
The Jarawa debate: Is backwardness "culture"?
The Jarawa tribals of the Andaman
were in the news this week. A news video put out by The Guardian showing
Jarawa women and children dancing in front of the camera for the benefit of
tourists caused uproar in the country. Local media picked up the story and
the Government has now ordered an enquiry.
The Jarawa are one of the four
Negrito aboriginal tribes inhabiting the Andaman Islands .
Their total population is said to be just around 250 or so. These tribes are
said to be among the direct descendants of man’s earliest ancestors who
migrated from Africa around 65,000 – 70,000 years ago. As
late as till the 1990s, the Jarawa were said to be living in their forests in
complete isolation and had resisted all contact with outsiders. But in the last
fifteen years, the Jarawa have gradually shed their isolation.
I first heard of the Jarawa
during my recent visit to the Andaman Islands . On our
way to the Limestone Caves
in North Andaman, our bus passed through the dense tropical rain forests of
Middle Andaman, home of the Jarawa tribes. We passed through these forests escorted by a police convoy. The vehicles were not allowed to stop for a stretch of about 50 kilometers till we reached the other end of the forest .
On a couple of occasions during our journey, the Jarawa came close to the
passing vehicles, providing a glimpse to the shocked tourists. Their faces were
painted yellow and they wore nothing.
This notice pasted in our bus said it all. Though unscrupulous tour operators need to be dealt with severely, there is no reason to deny Jarawa the benefits of modern development |
The construction of the 300-odd kilometer long Great Andaman Trunk Road that runs north – south through the length of
Andaman and through the heart of the Jarawa inhabited forest has opened up an opportunity to integrate the Jarawa into the national
mainstream. In fact, the Jarawa have now started to venture out of their forests,
initiating contact with human civilization. Though extremely hostile initially,
the Jarawa are reported to have turned friendly in recent years, asking for
food or even medical aid with villagers and farmers living on the fringes of
the forests.
But it is unfortunate that some
NGOs and environmental groups have been fighting for the closure of the Road,
demanding the Jarawa not be ‘disturbed’ or ‘their territory’ not encroached
upon. Terms such as ‘human safaris’ used liberally in the media have
unnecessarily sensationalized the issue. The Jarawa deserve the benefits of
progress and development as much as any other people. Keeping them backward and
in isolation in the name of ‘preserving their culture’ is clearly not the way
to go.
Monday, January 9, 2012
The King and the Falcon
Once upon a time, there was a King who received two Falcons as gift from a visiting sage. The King kept the falcons in his garden and took good care of them. Every day, one of the Falcons would fly high up in the air, go to far off places and return to the garden in the evening. The other falcon however, stayed put in one place and rarely moved out of the branch of the tree where it lived. The King wondered what the reason for this was, the sage had told him both the falcons fly high and far. The King asked his courtiers and ministers, enquired with all the wise men from his kingdom why the other falcon did not fly, but no one would give him a convincing reply, or make the falcon fly. The King announced a reward for anyone who could make the falcon fly. Several people tried, but all of them failed. The King gave up hope.
Then one day, the King heard that the falcon had started flying. It now went as high as the other falcon, as far as the other and came back in the evening. Surprised, the King asked who had made the falcon fly, and was told an old wise farmer had done it. The King called him to his court and asked, “What did you do to make the falcon fly?” “Oh, It was simple”, said the farmer, “I just cut the branch of the tree where the falcon lived”.
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Reminded me of a quote my friend Prabodh had told me – Everything you want in life is lying there, waiting to be picked, outside your comfort zone.